Inclusion of evidence-based healthy eating policies in Community Health Improvement Plans: Findings from a national probability survey of US local health departments
Sreedhara, Meera ; Goins, Karin V ; Rosal, Milagros C ; Lemon, Stephenie C
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diet
Community Health Improvement Plans
local health departments
Behavioral Medicine
Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms
Community Health and Preventive Medicine
Dietetics and Clinical Nutrition
Health Policy
Health Services Administration
Health Services Research
Preventive Medicine
Public Health Education and Promotion
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Abstract
Introduction: Evidence-based healthy eating (HE) policies can increase opportunities to engage in a healthy diet. The adoption of evidence-based policies into practice is limited and no study reports the status of HE policies nationally. Community Health Improvement Plans (CHIPs) strategically address health priorities, steer evidence-based strategy selection and implementation, and require collaboration. Local health departments (LHDs) are often key stakeholders. We aimed to determine the proportion of LHDs with a CHIP having evidence-based HE policies.
Methods:A national probability survey of US LHDs serving populations of
Results: 44.1% (95%CI: 34.7-54.0%) of US LHDs with a CHIP reported at least one evidence-based HE policy. The proportion of specific HE policies ranged from 28.9% for school district nutrition/procurement/vending policies to 1.3% for sugar-sweetened beverage tax.
Conclusions: Increased implementation of evidence-based HE policy approaches are needed within communities.
Source
2018 UMass Center for Clinical and Translational Science Community Engagement and Research Symposium